While we expected KTM to introduce the international-spec model to India, the bikemaker has taken a slightly different approach. Rather than being a KTM 390 Duke lookalike, the 125 Duke borrows its bodywork and underpinnings from the 200 Duke to keep costs in check. And we believe it makes perfect sense for a market like India where 125cc bikes are usually priced under Rs 70,000. Though the 125 Duke looks similar to the 200 Duke, KTM has revised the graphics on the entry-level bike to differentiate the two. It gets the exact same digital instrument console from its elder sibling with readouts such as real-time and average fuel efficiency, service indicator and distance-to-empty besides the obvious ones like speedometer, tachometer, odometer and fuel gauge. Moreover, the console also gets a shift indicator placed in the centre along with telltale lights placed above the speedometer. None of the current-gen 125cc bikes in the country sport such an info-laden console. Hell, even the 150-160cc segment miss out on these features.